Report: Nearly 1 in 7 kids in Highland Park had high levels of lead in their blood

Almost one in seven children living in Highland Park in 2016 had high levels of lead in their blood, according to a new report from the state's Childhood Lead Poisoning Prevention Program.

The study looked at nine different cities with historically higher-than-average rates of children with elevated blood lead levels (EBLLs), including Highland Park, Detroit, Grand Rapids, Flint and Lansing.

Federal guidelines state that for children under six, five micrograms per deciliter is considered a high blood lead level, though no amount is considered safe.

Of the nine targeted communities, seven had rates above the state average of 3.6 percent. Highland Park had the highest rate at 14 percent, while Detroit had the second highest at 8.8 percent. Flint was lowest at 2.4 percent.

Carin Speidel is a lead-safe housing coordinator with the Department of Health and Human Services. She says a lot of homes in older communities like Highland Park and Detroit were built before 1978, when lead was still used in paint.

"We certainly recommend anybody living in a pre-'78 property anywhere, regardless of where they're living in this state, to have their children tested, and insurance most often covers that test for the child," Speidel said.

The counties with the highest percentage of kids with EBLLs in 2016 were Jackson, St. Joseph and Calhoun at 7.6 percent, 6.4 percent and 6.4 percent, respectively.

Abdul El-Sayed shows no sign of backing away from a feud with Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan over the city’s building demolitions program.

The Democratic candidate for governor again slammed the program in a statement Friday, capping several days of verbal sparring with Duggan’s office. The back-and-forth followed El-Sayed’s appearance on Michigan Radio’s Stateside this week, when he said Detroit’s sweeping demolition blitz under Duggan was “poisoning kids with lead up until this year.”

A new study may ease some of the concern among Flint parents about the future of their children exposed to high levels of lead in their drinking water.

Flint children who've tested with high blood lead levels from their drinking water may experience learning problems as they age. Some scientific research, in particular a 2008 University of Cincinnati study, suggests the children may also be prone to criminal behavior later in life.